Ms. Choi focuses her practice in corporate law and finance. She has participated in advising and structuring acquisition of companies and assets in various industries including, renewable energy assets, real estate, automobile, hospitality, heavy industries, lumber, and financial. She has extensive experience in financial and investment transactions, working with both domestic and foreign financial entities, conducting transactional due diligence for project financing. Ms. Choi assists clients with all phases of the transaction lifecycle, ranging from strategic planning and structuring and negotiating complex contract arrangements, including advising on service performance, licensing and pricing strategies, and entities formation. She also focuses in inbound and outMore...More...
It is a requirement you needed to have executed by the owner of the home prior to starting the work, if the work exceeded $1000 in value for residentials. Your lien may not be accepted and even if it does get accepted by the county, the homeowners will have a defense to reject the lien basesd on your failure to get the disclosure signed. Also keep in mind, L&I penalty may apply. See More...
Hi there, 1. Why do you believe you are not entitled to file a lien against the homeowner? You do not neccessarily need a contract to file a lien. However, you do need to file the lien within 90 days from stopping the work on site. I recommend that you gather all relevant evidence regarding the work you performed (time log, material purchase receipts etc.) so you can prove your work. It sounds like the customer may claim that that the work was nSee More...See More...
Yes, that is a good idea. However, the lien waiver is usually executed between your general contractor and his subcontractors, unless you are hiring the subcontractors directly. Therefore, you can ask your general contractor to make sure all subcontractors he/she hire provide a lien waiver. See More...